Friday, June 20, 2008

Connect Your Computer to an XBOX 360

I've seen all the methods of doing this with Microsoft's programs. But none of them worked for me and I managed to find this method (wasn't easy)

So I decided to share and write up a how to as a sort of Finial Hoorah.

First thing is to make sure you can connect to your network. A good test is to sign into xbox live (silver is okay since we are just testing network connectivity). If you cannot connect to your network fix that then continue with this how-to.

Download orb (its the only download you'll need in this how to)
http://orb.com/en/download_orb
Its a free program (as always) and its easy to setup. After the install a new window will open.


Click next and you'll be prompted with a registration screen. Don't worry your information won't stream over the internet just your local network.

From Here you'll be asked if you want to stream to your local network, select whatever your applicable for (wired, wireless, both).

A test will then be run with the server to ensure you can host video and music (don't worry if it fails, your streaming over LAN anyway)

Once the setup is complete a new window will open in your default browser, again don't worry. All the information is private unless you make it public.

Since the computer is setup for to share we'll move onto the 360.

Go to the media blade. Select Music. It will say it found none but you'll notice it says press X to choose source. Press X and your computer will be there.

As you can see It already finds my Music (Notice the source?)
You'll need to press x (you do look at what each button does on occasion right?)


Select your computer and *POOF MAGIC* it worked where M$ failed (you know like usual). Repeat for the video and your done. That is unless you store your video and music outside the usual My Documents folders.


In that case. Go to the Orb Icon on your Task bar (lower right next to the time).

right click it and select "Configuration" Click the Media tab and add your media to location the correct list. You can even add network folders allowing you to connect multiple computers to your 360 at a single time (try that M$!).

Thanks for Reading and hope you Enjoyed it. I'm not planing on another post unless this one brings in tons of readers and several comments. Not much incentive. Feel free to E-mail me about request and I'll see if I can write a How-To to help you.

That is the basic how to. I've noticed some problems with it so here they are.

Video quality is lacking/choppy/slow load times
To remedy this I found several options
1. Right button click the Orb icon on the taskbar. Click the advanced tab. Then select Enable UPnP (both of them)
2. Select another Codec. Still under the Adanced tab select "Codecs" Of the choices choose ffdshow. If that isn't an option go back and select "install DScaller" then select "Codecs" and choose DScaller.
3.Under the orb window in you internet browser select open applications. Select Control pannel. Under the Drop down select General. On the left hand menu select streaming speed. Then set upstream speed to 90000.

Click apply and your done!

Failure to Launch

Like Most Blogs this one has bitten the dust, and hard must I say it.

My last move will be to do a full XBOX 360 post detailing how to setup a computer and a 360 so they communicate with each other.

Since I'm seeing many people failing to do so with little help on how to make it work (since M$ instructions are outdated, fail to work, and reference dead pages)

Since I'm leaving for camp this Saturday the post will be going up July 1st.

If anyone would like a How to I'll gladly take request.

Send them to Buddy027@gmail.com
Make sure to put Computer Tweak Blog as your subject. It will help when sorting to make sure I get your suggestions.

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Hard Drive Heatlh

Chose this topic because mine started showing signs of ages this week. Strange clicking noises i never noticed before. Founds a nice (free!) program to read smart data found in most HDD after Y2K. I wanted to put pictures but the Main site is actually fairly detailed. NEVERMIND discovered that it was a different site. can't find it now.

http://www.panterasoft.com/

Main page for HDD Health

HDD Health shows Smart data and runs silently in the background. Running it computer for 2 days it came up with the date of my HDD crash time. I have as little as six months until it crashes at current use and as much as two years before i need a replacement. Until then I'm keeping it defraged and backing up frequently. I will migrate my information as soon as I know I get another HDD. For everyone else who might experience a HDD crash I recommend that you buy a new HDD next weekend. Sure your current HDD might not crash for a year but what if it happens sooner? If you get the drive now you'll put stuff on it and take strain off the current HDD. And you don't run the risk of losing any files.

extra information will be added at request :P

Thursday, December 20, 2007

So i fell behind

life intervened and i forgot to update (seems not to matter tho since i have about 0 readers at this point but hey i can use a time waster).

i have seen alot of ways to boost PC performance recently. Most of which you need to pay for (go figure) the easiest way is to do as all the other blogs keep telling you. Uninstall programs you don't use. Remove programs from startup and of course get a virus scanner.

But by far if you have done everything short of completely reformation you computer to a "like new state" then i suggest you buy more ram. most carriers have it for 30-50$ per stick of 1 gig

US Modular ram 4 GIGS

or

centon 2 Gigs

both of those options (while not free) will be more then sufficient for running a Home PC. It wont be capable of high end gaming but if you only surf the Internet and type word documents then you will see vast improvements in Computer speed.

Recommended Programs to use (won't be providing links since i assume everyone knows how to search google :P)

AVAST (free antivirus)
Spybot Search and Destroy
Ad-Aware 2007
CCleaner
Comodo personal firewall (get 2.X version 3.X is just horrible with Defense+)

Optional Programs
TuneXP (Very advance program do not use unless you are willing to fix anything you break)

CachemanXP (nice for Computers with less ram and want to free up as much as possible)

AVG Anti Spyware

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

The Nerd Handbook

http://www.randsinrepose.com/archives/2007/11/11/the_nerd_handbook.html
The page I found that shows basically how to understand nerds and interact with them.

I felt like comping it directly but i knew i'd be screwed if i did. So heres the direct quote (i just liked it that much)


The Nerd Handbook

A nerd needs a project because a nerd builds stuff. All the time. Those lulls in the conversation over dinner? That’s the nerd working on his project in his head.

It’s unlikely that this project is a nerd’s day job because his opinion regarding his job is, “Been there, done that”. We’ll explore the consequences of this seemingly short attention span in a bit, but for now this project is the other big thing your nerd is building and I’ve no idea what is, but you should.

At some point, you, the nerd’s companion, were the project. You were showered with the fire hose of attention because you were the bright and shiny new development in your nerd’s life. There is also a chance that you’re lucky and you are currently your nerd’s project. Congrats. Don’t get too comfortable because he’ll move on, and, when that happens, you’ll be wondering what happened to all the attention. This handbook might help.

Regarding gender: for this piece, my prototypical nerd is a he as a convenience. There are plenty of she nerds out there for which these observations equally apply.

Understand your nerd’s relation to the computer. It’s clichéd, but a nerd is defined by his computer, and you need to understand why.

First, a majority of the folks on the planet either have no idea how a computer works or they look at it and think “it’s magic”. Nerds know how a computer works. They intimately know how a computer works. When you ask a nerd, “When I click this, it takes awhile for the thing to show up. Do you know what’s wrong?” they know what’s wrong. A nerd has a mental model of the hardware and the software in his head. While the rest of the world sees magic, your nerd knows how the magic works, he knows the magic is a long series of ones and zeros moving across your screen with impressive speed, and he knows how to make those bits move faster.

The nerd has based his career, maybe his life, on the computer, and as we’ll see, this intimate relationship has altered his view of the world. He sees the world as a system which, given enough time and effort, is completely knowable. This is a fragile illusion that your nerd has adopted, but it’s a pleasant one that gets your nerd through the day. When the illusion is broken, you are going to discover that…

Your nerd has control issues. Your nerd lives in a monospaced typeface world. Whereas everyone else is traipsing around picking dazzling fonts to describe their world, your nerd has carefully selected a monospace typeface, which he avidly uses to manipulate the world deftly via a command line interface while the rest fumble around with a mouse.

The reason for this typeface selection is, of course, practicality. Monospace typefaces have a knowable width. Ten letters on one line are same width as ten other letters, which puts the world into a pleasant grid construction where X and Y mean something.

These control issues mean your nerd is sensitive to drastic changes in his environment. Think travel. Think job changes. These types of system-redefining events force your nerd to recognize that the world is not always or entirely a knowable place, and until he reconstructs this illusion, he’s going to be frustrated and he’s going to act erratically. I develop an incredibly short fuse during system-redefining events and I’m much more likely to lose it over something trivial and stupid. This is one of the reasons that…

Your nerd has built himself a cave. I’ve written about The Cave elsewhere, but here are the basics. The Cave is designed to allow your nerd to do his favorite thing, which is working on the project. If you want to understand your nerd, stare long and hard at his Cave. How does he have it arranged? When does he tend to go there? How long does he stay?

Each object in the Cave has a particular place and purpose. Even the clutter is well designed. Don’t believe me? Grab that seemingly discarded Mac Mini which has been sitting on the floor for two months and hide it. You’ll have 10 minutes before he’ll come stomping out of the Cave — “Where’s the Mac?”

The Cave is also frustrating you because your impression is that it’s your nerd’s way of checking out, and you are, unfortunately, completely correct. A correctly designed Cave removes your nerd from the physical world and plants him firmly in a virtual one complete with all the toys he needs. Because…

Your nerd loves toys and puzzles. The joy your nerd finds in his project is one of problem solving and discovery. As each part of the project is completed, your nerd receives an adrenaline rush that we’re going to call The High. Every profession has this — the moment when you’ve moved significantly closer to done. In many jobs, it’s easy to discern when progress is being made: “Look, now we have a door”. But in nerds’ bit-based work, progress is measured mentally and invisibly in code, algorithms, efficiency, and small mental victories that don’t exist in a world of atoms.

There are other ways your nerd can create The High and he does it all the time. It’s another juicy cliché to say that nerds love video games, but that’s not what they love. A video game is just one more system where your nerd’s job is to figure out the rules that define it, which will enable him to beat it. Yeah, we love to stare at games with a bazillion polygons, but we get the same high out of playing Bejeweled, getting our Night Elf to Level 70, or endlessly tinkering with a Rubik’s Cube. This fits nicely with the fact that…

Nerds are fucking funny. Your nerd spent a lot of his younger life being an outcast because of his strange affinity with the computer. This created a basic bitterness in his psyche that is the foundation for his humor. Now, combine this basic distrust of everything with your nerd’s other natural talents and you’ll realize that he sees humor is another game.

Humor is an intellectual puzzle, “How can this particular set of esoteric trivia be constructed to maximize hilarity as quickly as possible?” Your nerd listens hard to recognize humor potential and when he hears it, he furiously scours his mind to find relevant content from his experience so he can get the funny out as quickly as possible.

This quick wit is only augmented by the fact that…

Your nerd has an amazing appetite for information. Many years ago, I dubbed this behavior NADD, and you should read the article to learn more and to understand what mental muscles your nerd has developed.

How does a nerd watch TV? Probably one of two ways. First, there’s watching TV with you where the two of you sit and watch one show. Then there’s how he watches by himself when he watches three shows at once. It looks insane. You walk into the room and you’re watching your nerd jump between channels every five minutes.

“How can you keep track of anything?”

He keeps track of everything. See, he’s already seen all three of these movies… multiple times. He knows the compelling parts of the arcs and is mentally editing his own versions while watching all three. The basic mental move here is the context switch, and your nerd is the king of the context switch.

The ability to instantly context switch also comes from a life on the computer. Your nerd’s mental information model for the world is one contained within well-bounded tidy windows where the most important tool is one that allows your nerd to move swiftly from one window to the next. It’s irrelevant that there may be no relationship between these windows. Your nerd is used to making huge contextual leaps where he’s talking to a friend in one window, worrying about his 401k in another, and reading about World War II in yet another.

You might suspect that given a world where context is constantly shifting, your nerd can’t focus, and you’d be partially correct. All that multi-tasking isn’t efficient. Your nerd knows very little about a lot. For many topics, his knowledge is an inch deep and four miles wide. He’s comfortable with this fact because he knows that deep knowledge about any topic is a clever keystroke away. See…

Your nerd has built an annoyingly efficient relevancy engine in his head. It’s the end of the day and you and your nerd are hanging out on the couch. The TV is off. There isn’t a computer anywhere nearby and you’re giving your nerd the daily debrief. “Spent an hour at the post office trying to ship that package to your mom, and then I went down to that bistro — you know — the one next the flower shop, and it’s closed. Can you believe that?”

And your nerd says, “Cool”.

Cool? What’s cool? The business closing? The package? How is any of it cool? None of it’s cool. Actually, all of it might be cool, but your nerd doesn’t believe any of what you’re saying is relevant. This is what he heard, “Spent an hour at the post office blah blah blah…”

You can be rightfully pissed off by this behavior — it’s simply rude — but seriously, I’m trying to help here. Your nerd’s insatiable quest for information and The High has tweaked his brain in an interesting way. For any given piece of incoming information, your nerd is making a lightning fast assessment: relevant or not relevant? Relevance means that the incoming information fits into the system of things your nerd currently cares about. Expect active involvement from your nerd when you trip the relevance flag. If you trip the irrelevance flag, look for verbal punctuation announcing his judgment of irrelevance. It’s the word your nerd says when he’s not listening and it’s always the same. My word is “Cool”, and when you hear “Cool”, I’m not listening.

Information that your nerd is exposed to when the irrelevance flag is waving is forgotten almost immediately. I mean it. Next time you hear “Cool”, I want you to ask, “What’d I just say?” That awkward grin on your nerd’s face is the first step in getting him to acknowledge that he’s the problem in this particular conversation. This behavior is one of the reasons that…

Your nerd might come off as not liking people. Small talk. Those first awkward five minutes when two people are forced to interact. Small talk is the bane of the nerd’s existence because small talk is a combination of aspects of the world that your nerd hates. When your nerd is staring at a stranger, all he’s thinking is, “I have no system for understanding this messy person in front of me”. This is where the shy comes from. This is why nerds hate presenting to crowds.

The skills to interact with other people are there. They just lack a well-defined system.

Advanced Nerd Tweakage

If you’re still reading, then I’m thinking that your nerd is worth keeping. Even though he’s apt to vanish for hours, has a strange sense of humor, doesn’t like you touching his stuff, and often doesn’t listen when you’re talking directly at him, he’s a keeper. Go figure.

My advice:

Map the things he’s bad at to the things he loves. You love to travel, but your nerd would prefer to hide in his cave for hours on end chasing The High. You need to convince him of two things. First, you need to convince him that you’re going to do your best to recreate his cave in his new surrounding. You’re going to create a quiet, dark place here he can orient himself and figure out which way the water flushes down the toilet. Traveling internationally? Carve out three days somewhere quiet at the beginning of the trip. Traveling across the US? How about letting him chill on the bed for a half-day before you drag him out to see the Golden Gate Bridge?

Second, and more importantly, you need to remind him about his insatiable appetite for information. You need to appeal to his deep love of discovering new content and help him understand that there may be no greater content fire hose than waking up in a hotel overlooking the Grand Canal in Venice where you don’t speak a word of Italian.

Make it a project. You might’ve noticed your nerd’s strange relation to food. Does he eat fast? Like really fast? You should know what’s going on here. Food is thrown into the irrelevant bucket because it’s getting in the way of the content. Exercise, too. Thing is, you want your nerd to eat healthily so that he’s here in another thirty years, so how do you change this behavior? You make diet and exercise the project.

For me, exercise became the project ten years ago after a horrible break-up. When the project was no longer the Ex, I dove into exercise every single day of the week. There were charts tracking my workouts, there were graphs tracking my weight, and there was the exercise. Every single day for two years until the day I passed out in a McDonald’s post-workout after not eating for a day. Ok, so time for a new project. Yeah, nerds also have moderation issues. That’s another essay.

Significant nerd behavioral change is only going to happen if your nerd engages in the project heart and soul, otherwise it’s just another thought for the irrelevant bucket.

People are the most interesting content out there. If you’ve got a seriously shy nerd on your hands, try this: ask him how many folks are in his buddy list? How many friends does he have in Facebook? How many folks are following him on Twitter? LiveJournal? My guess is that, collectively, your nerd interacts with ten times more people than you think he does. He can do this because the interaction is via a system he understands — the computer.

Your nerd knows that people are interesting. Just because he can’t look your best friend straight in the eye doesn’t mean he doesn’t want to know what makes her tick, but you need to be the social buffer — the translation layer. You need to find one common thread of interest between your nerd and your friend and then he’ll engage because he will have found relevance.

The Next High

As you discovered when you were the project, your nerd’s focus can be deliciously overwhelming, but it will stop. Once a nerd believe he fully knows how a system works, the challenge to understand ceases to exist and he moves on in search of The Next High.

While I don’t know who you are or why in the world you chose a nerd for your companion, I do know that you are not a knowable system. I know that you are messy, just like your nerd. Being your own quirky self will be more than enough to present new and interesting challenges to your nerd.

Besides, it’s just as much a nerd’s job to figure you out and maybe someone somewhere is writing an article about your particular quirks. Good news, he’s probably reading it right now.


Sunday, November 25, 2007

Cleanup Time

Most people have hard drives in excess of 100 gigs these days, but for those who still use older computers you want to use every possible byte you can without wasting any on temp files.

I've found a good way to cleanup your computer is CCleaner. Its a nice free program (who would have guessed with this blog :P). It does MASSIVE cleanup if you have high speed Internet due to all the temporary Internet files (for reference on a 30 gig hard drive I have have cleaned upwards of 3+ gigs by running on all users). I even ran it next month and another gig came off so you can see how important clearing Temporary Internet files can be.

I'm fairly sure I ran a scan earlier this week but I've gotten good at keeping my temp files down. (I have forgotten to empty the recycle bin and found that i have 2-3 gigs there).

Those are my settings, they tend to clear up everything big. You will also notice a registry button. Clicking that gives a similar screen but when you scan will show all the registry keys that you have that are broken and should be deleted. I've seen this scan take 20+ minutes and come up with some 4000 results. (same computer that i took 3 gigs off of) after words they noticed it was considerably faster then before. (it may also be the 14 viruses i took off but thats another story and another post to cover AntiVirus



http://www.ccleaner.com/

Any questions or if you know of a better program please tell me and i will gladly answer.